(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 21)
Multiply 10 by any number except zero, then divide 10 by the same number. The geometric mean of those two numbers will be 10.
like do you cross out the other numbers except the middle number
No whole numbers, if that's what you mean, except for the trivial 1 x 13. 13 is a prime number.
"Greater than" is the same as "Bigger than". In math, it really refers to where a number is located on the Number Line. If you have two numbers that are NOT equal and you see where they are on the number line, then the BIGGER of the two numbers, the one to the RIGHT, is greater than the other. 10 is greater than 2, for example. 10 is greater than 0, and 10 is also greater than -114.
bolt strength markings. Numbers represent metric threads and slashes represent standard threads (the greater the number/slashes, the greater the strength of the bolt.
That is not a valid telephone number. Telephone numbers do not contain letters, except in the form of vanity phonetic numbers (e.g. 1-800-DENTIST).
The players' numbers mean nothing except to the players. The players get to choose which number they want to wear.
It means all numbers greater than zero. Even 0.001 is a positive number. often shorthanded as +ve for positive.
If you mean: 41, 29, 35 and 23 then they are all prime numbers except for 35 which is a composite number.
You can choose an irrational number to be either greater or smaller than any given rational number. On the other hand, if you mean which set is greater: the set of irrational numbers is greater. The set of rational numbers is countable infinite (beth-0); the set of irrational numbers is uncountable infinite (more specifically, beth-1 - there are larger uncountable numbers as well).
When you're dealing with both positive and negative numbers, "greater" is understood to mean "more positive". There are an infinite list of numbers that are greater than -2.1 . Some of them are: -2.0 -1.0 zero +1 e pi 62 2010
There are no whole numbers that are not also counting numbers. Both terms mean the same subset of numbers: positive integers greater than zero. Some people consider zero to be a whole number but not a counting number, because you can't "count" zero.